I was waiting for my food at a restaurant early Monday morning when one of the employees came over to the counter to talk with me.
“I need to apologize to you for how I acted the other day,” she said quietly.
I was surprised, but I knew exactly what she was talking about. The last time I had seen her, she had been pretty rude. About five minutes after the place was supposed to be open that previous day — and after a couple of orders had been filled at the drive-through — I knocked on the drive-through window to let someone know the doors were still locked.
She was annoyed and she made that obvious. She and the other employees hadn’t gotten everything done before opening. There was stress or tension going on. She angrily blamed someone else at one point. She snapped at me a couple of times — as though I was somehow responsible.
I wasn’t happy about it, but I didn’t make a big deal about it. I just left and silently groused about how I had been treated.
And now — two days later — she was apologizing in a way that made it clear that she was sincere. She had clearly been bothered by the way she had acted.

My programming from childhood still equates blame with shame
Was Columbus a hero or a special kind of evil monster? Neither one
Free tires for a stranger? We forget all the people doing good
We like to think we’re complex, but personality gurus pegged me
Her dad didn’t want to help her, so here’s a jack-o’-lantern for Hannah
Too many voices with little to say: Politics matters less and less to me
As I quietly watch my world burn, I’m painfully aware this isn’t fine
Confessing my ego’s old desires reveals hidden fears of my past